logo
3 people still missing, down from nearly 100, from deadly floods in Texas county

3 people still missing, down from nearly 100, from deadly floods in Texas county

Boston Globe20-07-2025
Flash floods killed at least 135 people in Texas over the Fourth of July holiday weekend, with most deaths along the Guadalupe River in Kerr County, about 60 miles (100 kilometers) northwest of San Antonio. The floods laid waste to the Hill Country, which is naturally prone to flash flooding because its dry, dirt-packed soil cannot soak up heavy rain.
Advertisement
Vacation cabins, youth camps campgrounds fill the riverbanks and hills of Kerr County, and Camp Mystic, a century-old Christian summer camp for girls in a low-lying area along the Guadalupe. At least 27 of its campers and counselors died.
In Kerrville, about 100 miles (160 kilometers) west of Austin, local officials have come under scrutiny over whether residents were adequately warned about the rising water July 4.
'This remarkable progress reflects countless hours of coordinated search and rescue operations, careful investigative work, and an unwavering commitment to bringing clarity and hope to families during an unimaginably difficult time,' Kerrville City Manager Dalton Rice in a statement Saturday night.
Advertisement
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

These heat wave maps show just how hot it will get in New England this week
These heat wave maps show just how hot it will get in New England this week

Boston Globe

time7 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

These heat wave maps show just how hot it will get in New England this week

Here's how Tuesday will shape up temperature-wise throughout the day. Boston Globe This week marks the third time this summer that New England has experienced a heat wave, or temperatures of 90 and above for at least three straight days. The last one hit at the tail end of the Fourth of July weekend, running from July 6 to 8. A Boston officials issued their own heat advisory Monday for the city through Wednesday, stressing the dangerous levels of heat that could lead to Advertisement Boston's Chief of Emergency Preparedness Adrian Jordan said they're urging residents 'to take heat advisories on neighbors, and use available cooling resources across the city.' Advertisement These maps detail how hot it will get in New England during this heat wave: Tuesday will be even hotter than Monday across New England, reaching near 100 degrees. Boston Globe Rising dew points will make it feel quite muggy through Wednesday before they taper off for a more comfortable remainder of the week. Boston Globe The sweltering heat and humidity Tuesday could affect your health, so try to keep cool and hydrate. Boston Globe High temperatures Tuesday to Thursday for New England. Notice how Thursday is forecast to be much cooler. WeatherBELL Tuesday's forecast highs will be hotter, up to 97 degrees with heat index values to 100. Boston Globe The 7-day outlook for the Boston region. Boston Globe This map shows the temperature change from Monday to Thursday across the country. Temperatures peak in the Northeast before lowering on Thursday. Departure from normal temperatures - July 1-July 27: The departure from normal temperature. Nearly all of the Northeast has seen more cooling degree days than average, meaning more energy is needed to keep cool. NOAA/Cornell University Most of Massachusetts has been drier than average, with a small, narrow exception near the Mass Pike. WeatherBELL Lows for the week across the Boston region. Boston Globe for our that will arrive straight into your inbox bright and early each weekday morning. Marianne Mizera can be reached at

Our kids' summer break is coming to an end, but they shouldn't have one at all
Our kids' summer break is coming to an end, but they shouldn't have one at all

USA Today

time3 days ago

  • USA Today

Our kids' summer break is coming to an end, but they shouldn't have one at all

We have this idyllic idea of summer, that kids should be spending their vacations lazing about outside, under a tree, watching the clouds go by. But that's just not reality in a blazing desert. Why do kids in metro Phoenix even have a summer break? They should be in school. Wait, wait. Hear me out. This might even make sense. Summer isn't what it used to be. It's hotter now, with more stretches of 110-degree-plus weather. You can play outside, but not in the heat of the day and never for long. If the sunburn doesn't get kids, the quick dehydration will. Pools aren't the cooling savior that they once were, either. Fewer houses have backyard pools nowadays. And splash pads take time off work to visit. We send kids to camp, which is a lot like school Boredom quickly takes a toll. Either your house is a wreck from whatever your kids get into – again, because you can't just send them outside, and they have to do something – or you cave and give them more screen time to keep them quiet. Double this effect when their friends come over to play. Presuming there are even friends around to play. Parents who can afford it often use this time to travel out of state. Many also send their kids from camp to camp in the summer to keep them occupied. Again, isn't that steady stream of organized activity kind of like … school? Opinion: Extreme heat is a threat to families. Trump's budget makes it harder to escape. I know. We have this idyllic idea of summer, that kids should be spending their vacations lazing about outside, under a tree, watching the clouds go by. But that's just not reality in a blazing desert like this one. Plenty of folks complain that the summer is too short, that the school year keeps starting earlier. We shouldn't be back-to-school shopping on the Fourth of July. And, hey, I get it. My kid started back this week. Others already have a week or more of school under their belts. Phoenix should move summer break to the winter Even the later starting schools are back in session by early- to mid-August, drawing plenty of head-scratching from people on the coasts, who don't start until after Labor Day. But think of it this way: Summer in metro Phoenix is like winter for everyone else. And what do kids do in winter? They go to school. People in colder climates would never dream of keeping kids out of school for two months in the middle of January. They'd get cabin fever. Well, same concept here. Why don't we take a two-week break in the summer? We could time it around the Fourth of July, sort of how most schools pause for a couple of weeks around Christmas. And then we could have our summer break in November and December, or save it for February and March, when the weather is more bearable. You know as well as I do why this won't happen I know the answer as well as you do. We keep our kids home for weeks in the heat because it would force people to rework their vacations and move camps to other times of the year. It would be tough to schedule sports, because no one in their right mind would ever play a football game, even one under Friday night lights, in July. Opinion: School cell phone bans are a distraction. The real crisis isn't in your kid's hand. It also could cost more to cool cash-strapped schools that are normally vacant in summer, among any number of other reasons not to do this. Change is hard, especially when that change would make metro Phoenix the odd one out nationally. Then again, we relish our standalone status as the only state in the continental U.S. to not observe daylight saving time. Maybe it's not that weird of an idea after all. Especially, if – you know – we did it for the kids. Joanna Allhands is columnist and digital opinions editor for the Arizona Republic, where this column originally appeared. Reach Allhands at or on X: @joannaallhands

Blistering heat wave to grip the East: See what major cities will sizzle
Blistering heat wave to grip the East: See what major cities will sizzle

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • Yahoo

Blistering heat wave to grip the East: See what major cities will sizzle

ARLINGTON, Va. − The unrelenting heat wave that has baked the Midwest for days was expanding to the east on July 24 and promised temperatures approaching 100 degrees in New York, Philadelphia and Washington, D.C., by July 25. More than 130 million Americans were already under a heat warning, watch or advisory early on July 24 under a "heat dome" that has mixed a cocktail of high heat and humidity to push heat indices over 100 degrees in many areas. Heat indices measure how hot it actually feels when factoring for humidity. "A late July heat wave will continue to expand eastward during the second half of the week with sultry conditions on tap from the Lower Mississippi Valley and Midwest to the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic," wrote Peter Mullinax, meteorologist at the National Weather Service's Weather Predicition Center. Mullinax said record high temperatures are "likely to be challenged" in parts of the Northeast over the next two days, and all regions affected are also likely to see some record warm minimum temperatures broken. Heat indices will generally top out somewhere from 100 to 105 from the Southern Plains, Midwest and Great Lakes on July 24 and the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic by July 25, Mullinax said. Localized heat indices could possibly approach 110. South sweating it out: See who is next in triple digits Developments: ∎ Heavy rain, flash flooding and severe weather are likely July 24 from the Central Plains and Midwest to the Great Lakes. ∎ "Relatively tranquil" weather was expected across the West, but a fire weather threat was in effect for Northern California and parts of Nevada, Utah, Oregon, Idaho and Wyoming because of lightning. Sheriff says officials slept as deadly flood surged in Texas The sheriff and emergency management coordinator in Kerr County, Texas, were both asleep in the predawn hours of the Fourth of July when deadly flash floods overwhelmed the Guadalupe River, Sheriff Larry Leitha told CNN. Leitha, asked if he knew whether coordinator William "Dub" Thomas was working at the time, told CNN "I'm sure he was at home asleep at that time" and added that he was also asleep. Thomas, also a deputy sheriff under Leitha, did not immediately respond to a request for comment from USA TODAY. The National Weather Service had begun issuing information July 3 warning that storms could cause "considerable flash and urban flash flooding." At 1:14 a.m. on July 4 the weather service upgraded the watch to a flash flood warning, and at 3:08 a.m. an alert using the term "disaster" was used. At 4:23 a.m. a flash flood emergency was declared. A half hour later reports of rooftop rescues began coming in. Leitha said the county's emergency operations center was not up and running from 1-3 a.m., when some of the worst flooding occurred. Florida facing more heavy rainfall While a stubborn high pressure system has fueled the heat dome in the Midwest, a low pressure system over the northeastern Gulf means much of Florida and portions of the northern Gulf Coast could see more heavy rainfall July 24. Parts of Florida have already seen multiple inches of rain in recent days, and a Melbourne recreation center's roof partially collapsed during a storm July 22. The National Hurricane Center said in a July 24 advisory the area of low pressure is "currently producing a broad area of disorganized showers and thunderstorms." Forecasters said the system is expected to move generally westward across the north-central and northeastern portion of the Gulf over the next day or two where some slow development is possible. By the weekend, the system is expected to move inland, ending its chances for development. − Gabe Hauari and Finch Walker What causes a heat dome? A heat dome occurs when a persistent region of high pressure traps heat over an area, according to William Gallus, professor of in meteorology with the Department of Geological and Atmospheric Sciences, Iowa State University. "The heat dome can stretch over several states and linger for days to weeks, leaving the people, crops and animals below to suffer through stagnant, hot air that can feel like an oven," Gallus said in an article in The Conversation. Read more here. − Janet Loehrke See how the heat dome puts a lid on excessive temperatures in the Central and Southern US Heat dome could linger for two weeks The heat dome won't dissipate soon. Dangerous heat is expected across parts of the Central and Southeast through July, the weather service says. High temperatures will reach 100 degrees from Texas to western Tennessee almost every day for a week or two, AccuWeather said. The Northeast was given a couple days reprieve: highs in the 80s and relatively low humidity. But the dome will spread across the region July 25, driving high temperatures deep into the 90s that will feel like more than 100 degrees as the humidity builds there. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Blistering heat wave to grip the East: See what big cities will sizzle Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store